Montreal Gazette

Group quits boreal forest alliance

Canopy says no results after three years’ work

- HEATHER SCOFFIELD THE CANADIAN PRESS

OTTAWA — A key environmen­tal group has pulled out of a national alliance with the forest industry that was meant to protect the boreal forest while restoring the sector’s internatio­nal reputation for conservati­on.

Canopy, a conservati­on group instrument­al in putting together the Canadian Boreal Forest Agreement in 2010, says it is quitting the alliance because there has been nothing to show for three years of work.

Canopy executive director Nicole Rycroft says her group will instead pressure publishers and other key buyers of Canadian forest products to buy only from companies that commit to protecting large swaths of the boreal forest.

Canopy’s decision is the latest in a string of challenges for the alliance, with Greenpeace pulling out late last year citing lack of progress and poor company behaviour.

But remaining members on the environmen­tal and industry sides say they will persevere in the hope of producing concrete results in the next few weeks.

“Basically, from Day 1, the challenge has been moving words into action,” Rycroft said. “What we’re seeing is, we’re three years in, there are literally no results on the ground, and it’s time to go.”

The agreement was supposed to bring about a truce between environmen­talists and Canadian logging companies. The industry had been taking a beating in internatio­nal markets because of bad publicity, and companies agreed to work together with conservati­on groups to find mutual solutions.

While there has been lots of talk and much preliminar­y agreement, there has been no actual signed deal with government­s yet that would bring about legislated protection of more of the boreal forest.

The next few weeks are crucial for the future of the pact, said some of the remaining members.

The Canadian Parks and Wilderness Society will stick with the group for now, but it wants to see companies sign on to major arrangemen­ts in Quebec, Alberta and Ontario in the next few weeks, said Janet Sumner, executive director of the CPAWS Wildlands League chapter.

“Those will be a make or break,” Sumner said in an interview.

Similarly, the Forest Products Associatio­n of Canada recognizes the need to make the agreement work — and soon — especially after three years of work.

“We will make it work,” said Mark Hubert, vice-president of environmen­tal leadership for the industry associatio­n. All sides agree that some of the holdup in concrete results is because the subjects they are dealing with are very complex and involve historical enemies working together.

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